Poker Hands In Order Of Best To Worst

Poker Hands In Order Of Best To Worst 4,5/5 2030 votes

When evaluating poker hands there are a number of basic rules which are useful to know.

Order

Hands are ranked in order of their relative probabilities, the less probability there is to get a certain hand the more valuable it is considered to be.

Poker Hands In Order Of Best To WorstPoker
  • A poker hand always consists of 5 cards. In games such as Texas Holdem and Omaha Poker, where players have access to more than 5 cards, the best 5 card combination is considered to be each player’s hand. The rest of the cards are never considered, not even in the case of a tie.
  • There are four different suits in a deck of cards with 13 individual card rankings in each suit. These cards are ranked from Ace, which is the highest, to King, Queen, Jack, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 4, 3 and 2, which is the lowest.
  • All suites have the same value and the suits only matter if you have 5 of the same, giving you a so-called flush, or if you have 5 in the same suit and all cards are in sequential order, giving you a so-called straight flush.
  • Hands are always ranked primarily by category rather than individual card rankings. That means that the worst two pair hand, which is a pair of twos with a pair of threes, always wins overall hands with no pair, or with one pair, even if that pair is the highest (pair of aces).
Best

Below you will find a list of poker hands in order from highest to lowest to help you get started, as well as the top starting hands for Texas Hold'em. Click the button on the right to get a cheat sheet that displays the traditional poker hand rankings, which are used in the most popular variants of poker (such as Texas Hold‘em). (The winning poker hands chart below shows a list of poker hands, ranked best, to worst). Royal Flush: Ten, Jack, Queen, King, Ace, all of the same suit. Straight Flush: Any 5 cards of the same suit, in consecutive order.

The ranking of the different poker hands is as follows, from best to worst:

  1. Straight flush: Any five cards in sequence and of the same suit.
  2. Four of a kind: A hand with four cards of the same rank.
  3. Full house: A hand with three cards of one rank and two of another rank.
  4. Flush: Five cards of the same suit.
  5. Straight: Five cards in sequence.
  6. Three of a kind: Three cards of the same rank.
  7. Two pair: Two cards of one rank, two of another.
  8. One pair: Two cards of the same rank.
  9. High card: No pair or better, just five cards which don’t “help” each other in any way.

Poker Hands In Order Of Best To Worst

In some less played poker variations, of which we should note that none are available at any online poker rooms, wild cards can be used. This means that a card of a certain rank, usually the twos, can be played as if it was of any rank and/or suit that the player so wishes, making it possible to have five of a kind.

List Of Poker Hands In Order Of Best To Worst

In such cases five of a kind is considered better than a straight flush and is therefor the best possible combination.


Many beginner players get confused by what beats what in poker? In order to help these poker novices, our poker experts have listed below all poker hands ranked from best to worst. If you still have confusion, then feel free to drop an email at
help@online-poker-play.com and we will be pleased to help you out.
Royal Flush: An Ace-high straight (A-K-Q-J-10) of the same suit. It is the best possible hand in poker.
Straight Flush: Five consecutive cards of the same suit make a Straight Flush.
Four of a Kind: Four cards of the same rank are called a Four of a Kind or 'quads'.
Full House: Any three cards of the same rank, plus any other two cards of the same rank.
Flush: Any five cards of the same suit (not consecutive) are called a Flush.
Straight: Five consecutive cards of any suit make a Straight.
Three of a Kind: Three cards of the same rank ('trips').
Two Pair: A hand with two different pairs.
One Pair: Any two cards of the same rank.
A High-Card or No-Pair: Any hand in which no two cards have the same rank, the five cards are not in sequence, and the five cards are not all the same suit.